ADVT:

  Home   Astrology   Business   Indiafocus   Lifestyle   Movies   News   Parenting   Online Exam   Sports   Travel

News HomeWorldAsia
China wants curbs on open India-Nepal border
Sunday, June 29, 2008 13:22 [IST]

Kathmandu: Nepal's giant northern neighbour China is concerned about India's policy regarding the Himalayan nation and wants the open India-Nepal border to be controlled, a report said.

India and Nepal share a 1,800-km long open border. Following a treaty of peace and friendship signed more than 50 years ago, both countries allow each other's citizens to cross over the border without any visa.

Stung by the growing anti-China protests by Tibetan exiles in Nepal, Beijing is regarding the open border as a major factor that is fuelling the nearly three-month-long protests, Nepal magazine reported on Sunday.

"Tibetans fleeing from China come to Nepal and then enter India via the open border," the report said. "Then, if the need arises, they return to Nepal through that route. In this way, Tibetans who reside in India have been playing a major and determining role in the ongoing anti-China demonstrations in Kathmandu.

"Therefore, the most pressing need to stop the planned (anti-China) activities on Nepal's soil is by regulating or controlling the open international border between India and Nepal so that suspicious Tibetan activities can be controlled."

The report was written after a team of Nepali journalists this month went to China on a junket following an invitation by the Chinese government. In March, as Tibetans worldwide remembered a failed uprising against China's invasion of Tibet more then five decades ago, demonstrations sparked violence in Tibet, causing the death of several protesters.

Since then, Tibetan exiles in Nepal have kept up a steady flow of demonstrations in front of the Chinese Embassy in Kathmandu and the UN office, demanding the restoration of human rights in Tibet, release of all political prisoners and an independent investigation into the firings that they say killed over 200 unarmed Tibetans.

As the protests in Nepal grew, China has stepped up its courting of Nepal, extending invitations to Maoist chief Prachanda, who is headed to be the next prime minister, and other ruling parties. The report also quoted a Chinese think-tank member, who has been a frequent visitor to Nepal, as saying that China was aware of India's wish to bring Nepal under its control.

Wang Hong-wei, a professor at the Beijing-based Institute of Asian-Pacific Studies and Beijing's Nepal expert, was quoted as saying, "China knows very well that India wants to turn Nepal into a second Bhutan or Sikkim."

"It can try to Sikkimise Nepal. But China would not allow that. China would extend its utmost help to Nepal to keep its sovereignty, independence and integrity intact." Many Nepalis regard New Delhi with wariness, feeling that it could try to amalgam Nepal, as it did with the formerly independent kingdom of Sikkim, or could try to bring the smaller neighbour under its firm control, as they believe is the case with Bhutan.


Source : IANS

Add To

digg.com

del.icio.us

stumbleupon.com

My Yahoo

reditt.com

newsvine.com

fark.com
 Post Your Feedback   
Name
Email ID
Comments
 Other Features
News today
Screen Sever
Gallery
WallPaper
Print this page
Mail this page
Archives


  
More News
Mamta defends hefty salaries
A rare love story!
Lok Sabha adjourned over...
Liberhan report in this...
China coal mine blast: 104...
China mine blast death toll 104
Govt to help obese woman in...
Red alert at Guj Kandla oil...
Three Mile Island Nuke plant...
Who should I deal with in Pak?:...
LeT's Google Earth link to...
Who should I deal with in Pak?:...
Four held for misbehaving with...
20 arrested in Orissa for...
No fear of ties suffering under...
Pak not serious on Mumbai...
Assam twin blast toll rises to...
Open gateways to dual use...
Dalai Lama doesn't want to...
Mumbaikars don't about security
Sikh groups seek justice for...